Bon j'ai du nouveau.
Toujours pas de fichiers intéressants dans le /etc/udev/rules.d ... je peux écrire leur contenu ici mais rien qui ne parle.
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[root@dakat1 rules.d]# ls -a
. 75-cd-aliases-generator.rules.optional 90-hal.rules
.. 75-persistent-net-generator.rules.optional 99-fuse.rules
Par contre un /etc/sane.d/epkowa.conf assez intéressant:
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# epkowa.conf -- sample configuration for the EPKOWA SANE backend
# Copyright (C) 2004 Olaf Meeuwissen
#
# See sane-epkowa(5), sane-scsi(5) and sane-usb(5) for details.
# SCSI scanners can be configured simply by listing the path to the
# device. For example, if your system claims to have a /dev/scanner
# SCSI device, all you have to do is uncomment the following line:
#
#/dev/scanner
#
# In the interest of maintainability, most installations would have
# /dev/scanner sym-linked to the real SCSI scanner device node.
#
# An alternative way that works for many operating systems and is a
# little bit more generic, is to have the backend probe for your SCSI
# scanner with the following configuration command:
#
scsi EPSON
# On systems with libusb, the following line is sufficient to get the
# backend to recognise your USB scanners. It presumes, however, that
# the scanner---more precisely, it's USB product ID---is known to the
# backend.
# For all USB scanners that are officially supported by this backend,
# this presumption is true. A list of such scanners can be found in
# sane-epkowa(5).
#
usb
# For any USB scanner not known to the backend (yet), you may, at your
# own peril(!!), force the backend to recognise and use it via libusb.
# You can do so by the following configuration command:
#
# usb <USB vendor ID> <USB product ID>
usb 0x04b8 0x0116
#
# SEIKO EPSON's USB vendor ID is '0x04b8' (without quotes). In order
# to find the USB product ID, use lsusb(1) or, on Linux systems, peek
# at the information in /proc/bus/usb/devices.
# A sample configuration for the Perfection 1650 (GT-8200), which has
# a product ID of 0x0110, would look as follows:
#
#usb 0x04b8 0x0110
# When not accessing your USB scanner via libusb, you may need to use
# one of the configuration commands below or commands that are almost
# the same. These commands typically access the scanner via a kernel
# scanner module.
#
#usb /dev/usb/scanner0
#usb /dev/usbscanner0
#usb /dev/uscanner0
#
# Linux had a scanner module until version 2.6.2. As of version 2.6.3
# libusb is your only option. Linux' scanner module can be loaded via
# the modprobe(8) command like so:
#
# modprobe scanner vendor=<USB vendor ID> product=<USB product ID>
modprobe scanner vendor=0x04b8 product=0x0116
#
# If the scanner module already knows the vendor and product IDs, you
# do not have to specify them. If you want to have this done automa-
# tically every time you boot, you can add the above line, except for
# the modprobe command itself, to your /etc/modules file.
# Although not tested with this backend, parallel port scanners should
# be usable. You can configure them as shown below, but I do not know
# much about the details. Information is welcome.
#
#pio 0x278
#pio 0x378
#pio 0x3BC
J'ai modifié la ligne "usb 0x04b8 0x0116"
Bon je suis bien dans le groupe scanner, mais je me demande si il n'est pas tordu ce fichier /etc/group:
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root::0:root
bin::1:root,bin,daemon
daemon::2:root,bin,daemon
sys::3:root,bin
adm::4:root,daemon
tty::5:
disk::6:root
lp::7:daemon,daniel,joel,benjamin
mem::8:
kmem::9:
wheel::10:root,daniel,joel,benjamin
ftp::11:
mail::12:
uucp:x:14:
log::19:root,daniel,joel,benjamin
locate:x:21:
smmsp::25:
http::33:
games::50:
network:x:90:
video:x:91:daniel,joel,benjamin
audio::92:daniel,joel,benjamin
optical::93:daniel,joel,benjamin,hal
floppy:x:94:daniel,joel,benjamin,hal
storage:x:95:daniel,joel,benjamin,hal
power:x:98:daniel,joel,benjamin
nobody::99:
users::100:daniel,joel,benjamin
dbus:x:81:
rfkill:x:24:
daniel:x:1000:
joel:x:1001:
benjamin:x:1002:
hal:x:82:
avahi:x:84:
camera:x:97:
scanner:x:96:daniel,joel,benjamin
Voici ce que me dit maintenant sane-find-scanner:
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[root@dakat1 daniel]# sane-find-scanner
# sane-find-scanner will now attempt to detect your scanner. If the
# result is different from what you expected, first make sure your
# scanner is powered up and properly connected to your computer.
# No SCSI scanners found. If you expected something different, make sure that
# you have loaded a kernel SCSI driver for your SCSI adapter.
found USB scanner (vendor=0x04b8 [EPSON], product=0x0116 [EPSON Scanner]) at libusb:001:003
# Your USB scanner was (probably) detected. It may or may not be supported by
# SANE. Try scanimage -L and read the backend's manpage.
# Not checking for parallel port scanners.
# Most Scanners connected to the parallel port or other proprietary ports
# can't be detected by this program.
Et scanimage:
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[root@dakat1 daniel]# scanimage -L
device `epkowa:usb:001:003' is a Epson (unknown model) flatbed scanner
lsusb:
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[daniel@dakat1 ~]$ lsusb
Bus 005 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hub
Bus 002 Device 002: ID 045e:0084 Microsoft Corp. Basic Optical Mouse
Bus 002 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hub
Bus 003 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hub
Bus 004 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hub
Bus 001 Device 003: ID 04b8:0116 Seiko Epson Corp. Perfection 3170 (GT-9400)
Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
Scanner inconnu... c'est quand même étonnant... ce fameux modèle 0x0116 que si on recherche sur internet on voit qu'il embête tout le monde.
J'ai essayé de mettre le fameux pilote epson sur wine et c'est pas fameux... mais bon j'y comprends pas encore grand chose à wine hier je n'ai pu faire fonctionner qu'un pauvre petit programme qui émule une pitite calculatrice pour wind***s.